DJI released the Avata 360 in China on March 26, 2025, a first‑person‑view drone that records 8K spherical video at 60 fps with dual cameras and lets creators choose any angle in post‑production instead of framing during flight. The company announced the launch through its official channels, positioning the drone to meet growing demand for immersive content creation without needing separate 360‑degree rigs.
What's new. Two 1/1.1‑inch CMOS sensors with 2.4 µm pixels capture 120 MP stills and HDR video in full spherical mode, while single‑lens operation records 4K at 60 fps. The user‑replaceable front lens lets pilots swap out crash‑damaged glass without replacing the entire camera assembly. The 455 g (1.0 lb) airframe flies up to 23 minutes per charge and includes omnidirectional obstacle sensors that detect barriers during flight.
How it performs. ActiveTrack 360° and Spotlight Free modes automatically follow subjects through complex maneuvers, cutting pilot workload during action sequences. The O4+ data link streams 1080p video at 60 fps over distances up to 20 km (12 mi), while Wi‑Fi 6 connectivity speeds file transfers to the 42 GB internal storage. Early reviewers noted the system maintains stable tracking even when subjects move behind obstacles temporarily.
What it costs. European retailers list the Avata 360 at €459 (approximately $490 USD). DJI plans a global rollout following the China launch. U.S. buyers should check official channels for domestic release dates and pricing, as regional availability and replacement lens costs have not been confirmed for North America.
What's next. Creators planning 360‑degree aerial projects should compare the 8K HDR output against their workflow requirements and monitor independent reviews for low‑light performance benchmarks. Evaluate whether omnidirectional capture fits your production schedule, then watch for U.S. availability announcements and replacement‑part pricing before committing to early adoption.





















